Artwork Page for Portrait of Catherine Grey, Lady Manners

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Portrait of Catherine Grey, Lady Manners

1794
(British, 1769–1830)
Measurements
Framed: 280.5 x 185 x 9 cm (110 7/16 x 72 13/16 x 3 9/16 in.); Unframed: 255.3 x 158 cm (100 1/2 x 62 3/16 in.)
Public Domain
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Did You Know?

Catherine was an Irish poet who wrote of longing to escape the fashionable world.

Description

The Irish poet Lady Manners rejected as “unflattering” this portrait representing her as the goddess Juno, symbolized here by the peacock. Thomas Lawrence exhibited the painting at the Royal Academy in 1794 with the label “to be disposed of [sold],” but it was still in the artist’s collection when he died. Though it offended Lady Manners, the painting displays all the hallmarks of Lawrence’s flamboyant style:dazzling, fluid brushwork and an innovative use of unconventional colors that helped secure his role as the most fashionable portrait painter in turn-of-the-century Britain.
A full-length oil portrait depicts Catherine Grey, a woman with light skin tone, wearing a flowing white gown. She holds a pink rose in her right hand and stands and leans against a banister. A peacock perches on the banister behind her, on our right.

Portrait of Catherine Grey, Lady Manners

1794

Thomas Lawrence

(British, 1769–1830)
England, 18th century

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